Lady Chatterley's Lover Critical Analysis

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“The world is changing, I said. It is no longer a world just for boys and men. Our women are respected here, said the father”. Unfortunately, not all women are respected. Some are poorly treated because of their appearance, physical strength and intellectuality. The novel, Lady Chatterley’s Lover, is set during the industrial age right after World War I. During this era, there were many social classes in which women did not have many privileges. Lower classes had to pay more taxes than higher classes. In defying the social norms of that time, Constance (widely referred to as Connie) decides to fight for herself in order to discover herself. In D.H. Lawrence’s novel, Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Connie has to endure many difficulties of that time …show more content…

The novel is set right after World War I, when females are trying to fight for their rights. Men during this time didn’t regard women very highly. “She was too feminine to be quite smart” (Lawrence 24). This quote explains how the society of that time is against women. They don’t seem to think fashionable women to be intellectual. Since Connie is always dressed up fashionably, she is considered unintellectual by Clifford and his upper class male friends. Clifford and his friends express “the arrogance that is so virulent a combination of egoism and fear of the world” (Bedient np). Male chauvinism is evident throughout the novel. The men are arrogant and egoistic with the women and make them feel inferior. The women were fearful of the world because of lack of self-confidence. Gender racism, when an opposite gender is regarded highly instead of everyone being equals. In this case, males are regarded higher than …show more content…

Some people dislike their lives because of the social norms. Mrs. Bolton, even though from the lower class, adores the aristocrats. Lawrence states, “but when there was no question of contest, she was pining to be superior, to be one of upper class,” (Lawrence 116). Mrs. Bolton is from the lower class, but she is obsessed with aristocracy. She enjoys working for Clifford as she gets an opportunity to be close with the upper class. Class difference “appears to be as deeply rooted at the upper end of the scale among the workmen” (Broadus np). Many people seems to enjoy the comforts of the upper class, and especially workmen. In this novel, Mrs. Bolton represents the working class who strive to be a part of the upper class. Working with Clifford makes her feel

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